Historically, the region has been inhabited by
Ewe people. In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries,
Adangme refugees settled at Mount Agou, fleeing from slave traders. In
1870,
Ashanti troops tried to subdue the area, but were pushed back by the villages on the mountain. For this reason, the mountain is still seen as a symbol of resistance. In times of the German protectorate
Togoland, the mountain was called Baumann Peak (
Baumannspitze), named after geographer
Oscar Baumann. A mythical narration tells that when the Germans arrived in nearby
Naviè village, they made an agreement to buy what can fit into a sheepskin. They then cut the skin into pieces and surrounded the mountain with them. This story is similar to the traditional tale of the foundation of
Carthage by
Dido. In the 2000s, there were plans for commercial exploitation of the bauxite deposits on the mountain, which were met with protests from local environmental organisations. In the present day, the summit area is used for communications; the equipment includes an antenna on the mountain top. ==Tourism==